141 Ill. 519 | Ill. | 1892

Mr. Justice Shops

delivered the opinion of the Court t

The original bill was a proceeding under section 25, chapter 32, of the Be vised Statutes, entitled “Corporations,” to dissolve the corporation known as the J. L. Began Printing Company, to enjoin the sale of its property, and to procure the appointment of a receiver to wind up its affairs. The objection is made that the original bill fails to show a right in the circuit court to entertain jurisdiction and to appoint a receiver. The objection is based on the assumption that the proceeding is a creditor’s bill, which will not lie until the creditor has first reduced his demand to judgment, and exhausted his remedy at law by the return of an execution nulla Bona. The propriety of the original decree appointing the receiver is not involved on this appeal. The decree was entered by consent of the corporation and most of its officers, and the receiver was acting under that decree when leave was granted to the Commercial National Bank and Kalamazoo Paper Company to intervene. They each filed their petition, not to vacate any former order or decree, nor questioning the power and jurisdiction of the court in the appointment of a receiver, but for an order directing the receiver to pay the petitioners’ claims in full out of the collections made by him out of the hook accounts of the insolvent corporation. This was the relief sought. The court denied this relief and dismissed the petition, and from this order they severally appealed to the Appellate Court. The appeals will not bring up for review the order appointing the receiver and directing the property to be turned into his hands. The relief asked by petitioners was in subordination to such orders, and in recognition of their validity. Moreover, the attack is here made collaterally, and as the court had jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the parties, its order, no matter how erroneous, can not be thus attacked. Harris v. Lester, 80 Ill. 307; Wing v. Dodge, id. 564; Hernandes v. Drake, 81 id. 34; Wenner v. Thornton, 98 id. 156.

The order dismissing the petitions is sought to be upheld upon the ground that the president and secretary of the printing company were without power or authority to execute the assignment to West, and that it is therefore void. It appears that the board of directors had, prior to this assignment, passed a resolution, as follows: “The president and secretary of this company are authorized to hereafter execute judgment notes, chattel mortgages, bills of sale, or other instruments in their judgment necessary to the financial interests of the company.” We are inclined to concur with the" Appellate Court that the president and secretary, under such resolution, had power and authority to execute said assignment.

The only remaining question to be considered is, whether the court below erred in refusing to direct the payment of the money of the insolvent debtor corporation, derived from the collection of the book accounts, to be first applied on the claims of the intervening petitioners. In respect of the petition of the Commercial National Bank we are inclined, after full consideration of the case, to adopt the opinion of the Appellate Court, which is as follows :

“The sole consideration of the $13,000 note, to satisfy which the bank now seeks to have the book accounts which were assigned to West, and by him to the bank, applied, was the purchase of a portion of the capital stock of the printing company. The financial condition of the printing company at the time that West purchased the said shares of stock was not such as would, under the law as announced by our Supreme Court, permit it to thus diminish its capital stock and impair the rights of its creditors,—and that condition was Imown to West. The purchase of the stock by West from Taggy made West a stockholder of the company, and he, knowing its condition, could not sell that stock to the company in such a manner as to hold property received from the company in consideration thereof, against then existing creditors of the company. The question is settled by the decision -of the case of Clapp et al. v. Peterson, 104 Ill. 26, where it is held that the purchase of its own stock by a corporation by ike exchange of its property of equal value, though made in good faith and without any element of fraud about it, there not being anything in the apparent condition of the company to interfere with the making of the exchange, will not be allowed where it injuriously affects a creditor of the company, even though the fact of the indebtedness was not at the time established or known to the stockholders. The court holds that the capital stock of an incorporated company is a fund set apart for the payment of its debts, and that the directors of the company hold it in trust for that purpose, and say: ‘The shareholders of the corporation are conclusively charged with notice of the trust character which attaches to its capital stock.’ As to it they can not occupy the status of innocent purchasers, but they are to all intents and purposes privies to the trust. When, therefore, they have in their hands any of this trust fund, they hold it cum onere subject to all equities which attach to it. Now, the evidence, so far as it shows the purpose for which the assignment of the book accounts was made, establishes that it was made as security for the note for $13,000, given in consideration of the transfer of the stock to the company, and as security for the payment of the debt due to the Kalamazoo Paper Company. This is the testimony of West and of the secretary of the company, and is substantially uncontradicted. The transfer of the notes from West to the bank having been made before the note was due, made the bank an innocent holder of the note for value, and protected it under the rule which protects the innocent purchaser of negotiable paper. But the book accounts were mere choses in action, and the assignment of them a transfer of so much of the property of the J. L. Began Printing Company to West to satisfy the said note. Bach successive assignee of a chose in action takes it subject to the equities existing between the original assignor and his immediate assignee. Therefore, if West could not hold the book accounts as collateral security for the payment of the $13,000 note, the bank can not hold it, for, as far as the assignment of the book accounts was concerned, the bank stands in the shoes of West. It holds its negotiable promissory notes relieved from all defenses, but held the book accounts subject to all defenses, and therefore subject to the claims of the creditors of the corporation. The court therefore properly dismissed the intervening petition of the said hank, but such dismissal will not operate to prevent said bank from proving up its claim upon the note,- and sharing pro rata in the assets of the printing company in the hands of the receiver.”

In respect of the decree dismissing the intervening petition of the Kalamazoo Paper Company, we, however, feel constrained to differ with that court in the result reached. There is, as it is said, no question that the claim of the paper company was bona fide. The Began Printing Company was at the time a going corporation, and, as said by this court in Burch v. West, 134 Ill. 258, it is clear that the officers of the corporation did not contemplate that the corporation would make a voluntary assignment of its property, and that those in charge of its business were using every endeavor to tide over the indebtedness of the corporation with a view of an improvement in its affairs. In that case the question was, whether the execution and delivery of the judgment note amounted to a voluntary assignment, and it was held that it did not. The court there found that the judgments sought to be enjoined were based upon full, adequate and valuable considerations, and it was said that nothing appears in the record to'charge, any of the judgment creditors with fraud, or to show that the judgments were eollusively entered. The judgments being in nowise impeached under the statute, (Rev. Stat. p. 69, sec. 7,) could not be enjoined, and it was accordingly held that the bill seeking to enjoin the collection of the judgment was properly dismissed. In this case no attack is made upon the judgment of the Kalamazoo Paper Company, nor is it sought in any way to interfere with its collection. On the contrary, the Kalamazoo Paper Company comes into a court of equity and seeks affirmative relief in its own behalf. To entitle it to such relief it must come with clean hands, and be prepared to do equity. A party will not be permitted to come into a court of equity to enable him to reap the fruits of fraud; and if it appears that the-right sought to be enforced in equity is unconscionable, or has been obtained by fraud, deceit or covin, a court of equity will not lend its aid.

It is conceded that James J. West was the authorized agent of the Kalamazoo Paper Company. At the time of the execution of the note to the paper company and the assignment of the book accounts to West, he knew that the J. L. Began Printing Company was an insolvent corporation, that it was largely indebted to other persons and corporations, and unable to pay its debts. The Kalamazoo Paper Company must be held responsible for the knowledge and conduct of its agent, West. He, by his representations and conduct, had led the president of the Began Printing Company to believe that he was friendly to it, and would aid it financially. The proof tends to show that West applied in the afternoon to the president of the company for the execution of the assignment, saying, in effect, that he only wanted it as protection in the event that anything happened; that the president might be killed in going up and down the elevator, and the like; that it was intended to put the notes away where they could not be seen, and the assignment would be used only in the event of disaster overtaking the company, and that the president was induced by these representations to execute the formal assignment. On the same afternoon, after procuring the assignment, West caused judgments to be entered up upon the notes which he held for over $40,000, and execution immediately to be issued, and the sheriff put in possession of all the property of the company on the same day, and its business closed. On the same afternoon, in the absence of the officers of the company and in apparent violation of the understanding, the books were, by West’s orders, loaded into a wagon and taken to the office of West’s attorney, and two days later delivered into the possession of the Commercial National Bank as collateral to the note of West. As said by the Appellate Court,.“the fact that West intended, at the time he took the assignment, to enter up his judgments and levy upon the remaining property of the company, and leave other creditors with their debts unpaid, may be fairly inferred from the evidence.” But there is more than this. He procured the preference by unquestioned fraud and overreaching, and now he, or his principal, for whom he acted, seeks the aid of a court of equity to reap the fruits of his fraudulent practices.

We fully recognize the doctrine that the law favors the diligent creditor, and will uphold him in .pursuing all legitimate means to secure or satisfy his debt, whether the debtor be an insolvent corporation or an insolvent person. But here the means resorted to were not legitimate, but were in the highest sense culpable and fraudulent. The officers of the company were led to believe that by taking this step they would be permitted to go on, with a fair hope of meeting the obligations of the corporation. Without the active fraud practiced it is clear the assignment would not have been made. As said by this court in Fortier v. Darst, 31 Ill. 212: “A party who comes into a court of equity asking for equitable relief, which a court of law can not afford him, and exhibits a case all blotched over with fraud and overreaching, as this is, must expect but little favor or sympathy at our hands.” Here, the assignment was obtained through falsehood, fraud and deception, and possession of the books of account taken forcibly and without leave of the company, and, as before said, at least in apparent violation of the understanding.

It is not necessary to here determine whether the officers of an insolvent corporation, knowing it to be insolvent, may prefer creditors, for the preference here obtained was not by the consent fairly or lawfully obtained from any officer of this corporation. In equity and good conscience it should be treated as if no assignment had been attempted to be made.

We are of opinion that the Appellate Court erred in reversing so much of the decree of the circuit court as dismissed the intervening petition of the Kalamazoo Paper Company, and in so far the judgment will be reversed. In all other respects the judgment is affirmed.

It being admitted that the debt was bona fide, there is no objection apparent in permitting the Kalamazoo Paper Company to prove its claim and share pro rata in the assets in the hands of the receiver, with the other unsecured creditors.

Judgment affirmed in part and in part reversed.

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